Tools for the Japanese Table

Bjorn Heiberg, the “Savior of the Japanese Knife”

Culture

Razor-sharp Japanese wabōchō, chef’s knives created by skilled master craftsmen, are essential to the preparation of washoku. Bjorn Heiberg, who runs knife specialty stores in Osaka and Tokyo, fell in love with wabōchō after coming to Japan, and is spreading the good word about these remarkable knives to the rest of the world.

Never Throw Away Culture

While exports of wabōchō have been growing in recent years, domestic sales are falling. The wabōchō made by traditional craftsmen are more expensive than mass-produced products, and because the blades are so sharp they can be easily nicked and need regular sharpening. Western-style stainless steel knives are cheaper and easier to maintain in comparison.

“A knife is a tool you use every day,” counters Heiberg. “When you have a sharp knife, it shortens your cooking time and makes cooking itself more fun. Sharpening a wabōchō now and then doesn’t take much time or effort. If anything, the real problem is that so many stores today sell wabōchō without explaining how to take care of them properly and how important it is to do that. If you take good care of a wabōchō, you can use it for years and years. Choosing a cheap knife that you’ll just toss when it starts getting old means throwing away a priceless culture.”

Craftsman Kobayashi Hiroki from Seki, Gifu Prefecture, demonstrates blade sharpening in-house.

Passing On the Skills of Craftsmen

The Osaka shop’s exterior.

Tower Knives Osaka is winning a reputation both in Japan and abroad for its careful explanations of wabōchō and the range and quality of its stock. When Heiberg first started, the store was a second-floor walk-up. He soon relocated to a more spacious first-floor location, and followed that in 2015 by launching Tower Knives Tokyo in the Tokyo Solamachi shopping complex at the base of Tokyo Skytree. Then, in November 2016, he opened his pride and joy, the Tower Knives Osaka combination store and knife workshop.

“Our knife workshop is the distillation of all that I’ve been trying to achieve,” says Heiberg. “I wanted to create a store where craftsmen and customers could interact directly. Wabōchō only exist because of the skills of individual craftsmen. No matter how thoroughly you explain a product, if the customer doesn’t understand its creator’s technique and attention to detail, then you can’t convey its true allure. In this new store you get to experience the craftsmen’s techniques firsthand, speak with them directly, and buy your own just-finished wabōchō.”

Tower Knives Osaka, with the glass-fronted workshop in the rear.

Knives That Enrich Your Life

Kobayashi says he owes Heiberg a debt of gratitude.

Kobayashi Hiroki was born into a family of blade polishers in the city of Seki, Gifu Prefecture, and has continued to hone his knife-making skills with Heiberg’s constant encouragement. Today he is a craftsman who can perform every step in the manufacture of a wabōchō by himself, and even has his own brand.

“At Bjorn’s store I can talk directly with the customers and see how happy they are when they buy one of my knives,” he says. “For a craftsman, a place like this makes it all feel worthwhile. And in addition, I get to meet and learn new skills from incredible craftsmen from other parts of Japan, like Mr. Fujii. It brings together not only the craftsmen and the customers, but wabōchō craftsmen from all over Japan. Until now we never had much contact with one another, but domestic demand for wabōchō is falling and we can’t turn that around working alone. It may just be that Bjorn becomes the savior of the wabōchō world.”

Kobayashi’s wabōchō are both incredibly sharp and beautiful to behold.

In addition to running his stores, Heiberg continues to put out the good word about wabōchō through public presentations and other publicity channels. He has also been providing wabōchō to washoku cooking classes for foreigners visiting Japan, so they can experience the quality of these unique knives for themselves.

“In Japanese they use the word kireaji to describe how well a knife cuts,” says Heiberg. “It’s written with the kanji for ‘to cut’ (kireru) and ‘flavor’ (aji, also pronounced mi), and it’s true: The flavor comes from the cut. Wabōchō make food more delicious and make cooking it more fun. I sometimes get email from our foreign customers saying ‘wabōchō changed my life,’ or, ‘your wabōchō give me joy,” and I don’t think they're exaggerating. Little by little, wabōchō are being adopted overseas, but right now a lot of what’s getting distributed are mass-produced products that are only so-so. I’m working my hardest to make sure the wabōchō of Japan’s true craftsmen get used around the world.”

Store Information

Tower Knives Osaka (main store)
  • 1-4-1 Ebisu Higashi, Naniwa-ku, Osaka (three minutes from Ebisuchō station on the Sakaisuji subway line, eight-minute walk from Dōbutsuen-mae station on the Midōsuji subway line).
  • Opening hours: 10:00 to 18:00 daily.
  • More than 300 varieties of wabōchō always in stock. Prices range from ¥5,000 to more than ¥200,000.
  • Languages: English- and French-speaking staff always available. Chinese-speaking staff available on some days.
  • http://www.towerknives.com/
(Originally written in Japanese by the Nippon.com editorial staff and published on May 3, 2017. Photographs and video by Miwa Noriaki.)

Related Tags

craftsmanship video tourism Osaka Japanese cuisine traditional crafts cuisine movies Kansai Kansai region knives japanese knives Japanese chef’s knives Shinsekai food culture

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